About Bluecrest Journal
Bluecrest Journal exists for one reason: technology is moving faster than most of us can track, and the headlines alone don’t tell the full story. We set out to build a publication that sits somewhere between the urgency of breaking news and the depth you’d expect from a considered magazine feature. No hot takes for the sake of them. No recycled press releases dressed up as reporting. Just clear-eyed coverage of what’s actually happening—and why it matters.
We cover artificial intelligence as it moves out of research labs and into everyday life. We follow startups not just when they raise money, but when they build something worth paying attention to. We test consumer devices that people genuinely use—phones, wearables, laptops—and we’re honest about what works and what doesn’t. And we keep an eye on the global innovation ecosystems that are reshaping industries in ways that often go underreported.
Our format reflects how people actually read now. You’ll find regular columns, in-depth feature stories, and curated briefings that pull together the week’s essential developments. The idea is simple: respect the reader’s time and intelligence. Some days that means a sharp 400-word analysis of a funding round. Other days it means a 2,500-word piece on the researchers quietly building the infrastructure behind the AI boom.
We’re based in the UK, but our lens is deliberately international. A breakthrough in Seoul or a regulatory shift in Brussels can be just as significant as what’s happening in Silicon Valley—and we’d argue that too much tech coverage still defaults to a narrow set of postcodes. We try to do better.
Bluecrest Journal is edited by Miles Hartley, a London-based journalist who spent years covering consumer gadgets and software releases for UK tech magazines before his focus deepened. These days, his work spans long-form features on AI breakthroughs, profiles of startup founders, and analysis of the global forces driving digital change. His guiding belief—the one that shapes everything we publish—is that technology coverage should help readers understand not just what launched today, but what’s coming next and who’s building it.
If you’re a curious professional trying to stay informed, or simply someone who finds genuine pleasure in watching the future take shape, you’re in the right place. We’re glad to have you.
Contact: [email protected]